Economic status is the problem — not race

Poverty determines most people's range of opportunities.

Published 1:00 am, Saturday, June 4, 2011

Scholars from the Harvard Business School and Tufts University's department of psychology recently confirmed the obvious in contemporary American race relations. The title of their report, “Whites See Racism as a Zero-Sum Game That They Are Now Losing,” pretty much says it all.

Published late last month in the journal Perspectives on Psychological Science, the report by Michael Norton and Samuel Sommers says whites believe that as bias against blacks decreased in the last six decades, intentional discrimination against whites has increased. Whites now see anti-white bias as a bigger societal problem than anti-black bias.

Claims of reverse-racism are as old as the first anti-discrimination laws. And with the recent economic insecurity, it's not surprising that majorities are looking to blame minorities for real and perceived stunted prosperity.

Sometimes, they can even point to concrete evidence of bias.

In the two weeks before the authors findings were published, and in the thick of the worst employment situation since the Great Depression, a few of these out of the ordinary news stories went viral. Last month, the Dots clothing store chain agreed to pay $246,500 to a group of at least 23 white applicants in Hobart, Ind., after the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) sued for explicitly denying them jobs because of their race.

Near the same time, four white Philadelphia teachers filed federal race-bias lawsuits accusing their black principal of creating a hostile work environment by requiring them to read an article that made the claim that “white teachers do not have the ability to teach African-American students” and letting black teachers ignore rules that their white counterparts had to follow.

These are exceptional cases — the EEOC has handled almost 600,000 race-based discrimination claims just since 1992, almost all involving minorities.

And let us not forget that the anti-white narrative targets other minority groups: Asian immigrants are said to steal high-tech jobs from qualified white graduates, illegal Latin American immigrants are seen as taking manual labor jobs that U.S. citizens would do if they were paid a fair wage, and students who are not proficient in the English language are blamed for drawing time and financial resources away from the usually white students who are.

But for every indicator that whites are having a harder time in life, there are many others that unquestionably show that whites still have a tremendous edge over nonwhites in income, educational attainment and rates of incarceration. And, of course, there are plenty of rigorous studies documenting various minority groups' high levels of feeling discriminated against, too. That all groups feel aggrieved by others' treatment of them based on their race is a sort of a sad equality unto itself.

This is why Norton and Sommers' conclusion presents us with an opportunity to take some of the laser focus off racial discrimination and instead move on to the issue underlying the angst: socio-economics. It's time to recast our current societal tensions as stemming primarily not from racial bias but from a lack of economic opportunities that, frankly, don't discriminate.

Poverty is the No. 1 circumstance that determines a person's range of life opportunities.

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If Norton and Sommers' research has a wide-ranging impact on anti-discrimination laws, it might offer the opportunity to redefine discrimination more equitably. Thinking about financial advantages and disadvantages, rather than in racial or ethnic terms, when re-evaluating laws related to affirmative action and equal treatment is probably the best way to forge ahead in a soon-to-be minority-majority country.